“I have made a hobby of the
study of cigar ends,” said the stranger, as
the Associated Shades settled back to hear his account
of himself. “From my earliest youth, when
I used surreptitiously to remove the unsmoked ends
of my father’s cigars and break them up, and,
in hiding, smoke them in an old clay pipe which I
had presented to me by an ancient sea-captain of my
acquaintance, I have been interested in tobacco in
all forms, even including these self-same despised
unsmoked ends; for they convey to my mind messages,
sentiments, farces, comedies, and tragedies which
to your minds would never become manifest through
their agency.”
The company drew closer together and
formed themselves in a more compact mass about the
speaker. It was evident that they were beginning
to feel an unusual interest in this extraordinary person,
who had come among them unheralded and unknown.
Even Shylock stopped calculating percentages for
an instant to listen.
“Do you mean to tell us,”
demanded Shakespeare, “that the unsmoked stub
of a cigar will suggest the story of him who smoked
it to your mind?”
“I do,” replied the stranger,
with a confident smile. “Take this one,
for instance, that I have picked up here upon the wharf;
it tells me the whole story of the intentions of Captain
Kidd at the moment when, in utter disregard of your
rights, he stepped aboard your House-boat, and, in
his usual piratical fashion, made off with it into
unknown seas.”
“But how do you know he smoked
it?” asked Solomon, who deemed it the part of
wisdom to be suspicious of the stranger.
“There are two curious indentations
in it which prove that. The marks of two teeth,
with a hiatus between, which you will see if you look
closely,” said the stranger, handing the small
bit of tobacco to Sir Walter, “make that point
evident beyond peradventure. The Captain lost
an eye-tooth in one of his later raids; it was knocked
out by a marine-spike which had been hurled at him
by one of the crew of the treasure-ship he and his
followers had attacked. The adjacent teeth were
broken, but not removed. The cigar end bears
the marks of those two jagged molars, with the hiatus,
which, as I have indicated, is due to the destruction
of the eye-tooth between them. It is not likely
that there was another man in the pirate’s crew
with teeth exactly like the commander’s, therefore
I say there can be no doubt that the cigar end was
that of the Captain himself.”
“Very interesting indeed,”
observed Blackstone, removing his wig and fanning
himself with it; “but I must confess, Mr. Chairman,
that in any properly constituted law court this evidence
would long since have been ruled out as irrelevant
and absurd. The idea of two or three hundred
dignified spirits like ourselves, gathered together
to devise a means for the recovery of our property
and the rescue of our wives, yielding the floor to
the delivering of a lecture by an entire stranger
on ‘Cigar Ends He Has Met,’ strikes me
as ridiculous in the extreme. Of what earthly
interest is it to us to know that this or that cigar
was smoked by Captain Kidd?”
“Merely that it will help us
on, your honor, to discover the whereabouts of the
said Kidd,” interposed the stranger. “It
is by trifles, seeming trifles, that the greatest
detective work is done. My friends Le Coq, Hawkshaw,
and Old Sleuth will bear me out in this, I think,
however much in other respects our methods may have
differed. They left no stone unturned in the
pursuit of a criminal; no detail, however trifling,
uncared for. No more should we in the present
instance overlook the minutest bit of evidence, however
irrelevant and absurd at first blush it may appear
to be. The truth of what I say was very effectually
proven in the strange case of the Brokedale tiara,
in which I figured somewhat conspicuously, but which
have never made public, because it involves a secret
affecting the integrity of one of the noblest families
in the British Empire. I really believe that
mystery was solved easily and at once because I happened
to remember that the number of my watch was 86507B.
How trivial and yet how important it was, to what
then transpired, you will realize when I tell you
the incident.”
The stranger’s manner was so
impressive that there was a unanimous and simultaneous
movement upon the part of all present to get up closer,
so as the more readily to hear what he said, as a result
of which poor old Boswell was pushed overboard, and
fell, with a loud splash into the Styx. Fortunately,
however, one of Charon’s pleasure-boats was
close at hand, and in a short while the dripping,
sputtering spirit was drawn into it, wrung out, and
sent home to dry. The excitement attending this
diversion having subsided, Solomon asked:
“What was the incident of the lost tiara?”
“I am about to tell you,”
returned the stranger; “and it must be understood
that you are told in the strictest confidence, for,
as I say, the incident involves a state secret of
great magnitude. In life—in the mortal
life—gentlemen, I was a detective by profession,
and, if I do say it, who perhaps should not, I was
one of the most interesting for purely literary purposes
that has ever been known. I did not find it
necessary to go about saying ‘Ha! ha!’
as M. Le Coq was accustomed to do to advertise his
cleverness; neither did I disguise myself as a drum-major
and hide under a kitchen-table for the purpose of
solving a mystery involving the abduction of a parlor
stove, after the manner of the talented Hawkshaw.
By mental concentration alone, without fireworks
or orchestral accompaniment of any sort whatsoever,
did I go about my business, and for that very reason
many of my fellow-sleuths were forced to go out of
real detective work into that line of the business
with which the stage has familiarized the most of
us—a line in which nothing but stupidity,
luck, and a yellow wig is required of him who pursues
it.”
“This man is an impostor,”
whispered Le Coq to Hawkshaw.
“I’ve known that all along
by the mole on his left wrist,” returned Hawkshaw,
contemptuously.
“I suspected it the minute I
saw he was not disguised,” returned Le Coq,
knowingly. “I have observed that the greatest
villains latterly have discarded disguises, as being
too easily penetrated, and therefore of no avail,
and merely a useless expense.”
“Silence!” cried Confucius,
impatiently. “How can the gentleman proceed,
with all this conversation going on in the rear?”
Hawkshaw and Le Coq immediately subsided,
and the stranger went on.
“It was in this way that I treated
the strange case of the lost tiara,” resumed
the stranger. “Mental concentration upon
seemingly insignificant details alone enabled me to
bring about the desired results in that instance.
A brief outline of the case is as follows: It
was late one evening in the early spring of 1894.
The London season was at its height. Dances,
fetes of all kinds, opera, and the theatres were in
full blast, when all of a sudden society was paralyzed
by a most audacious robbery. A diamond tiara
valued at 50,000 pounds sterling had been stolen from
the Duchess of Brokedale, and under circumstances
which threw society itself and every individual in
it under suspicion—even his Royal Highness
the Prince himself, for he had danced frequently with
the Duchess, and was known to be a great admirer of
her tiara. It was at half-past eleven o’clock
at night that the news of the robbery first came to
my ears. I had been spending the evening alone
in my library making notes for a second volume of
my memoirs, and, feeling somewhat depressed, I was
on the point of going out for my usual midnight walk
on Hampstead Heath, when one of my servants, hastily
entering, informed me of the robbery. I changed
my mind in respect to my midnight walk immediately
upon receipt of the news, for I knew that before one
o’clock some one would call upon me at my lodgings
with reference to this robbery. It could not
be otherwise. Any mystery of such magnitude
could no more be taken to another bureau than elephants
could fly—”
“They used to,” said Adam.
“I once had a whole aviary full of winged elephants.
They flew from flower to flower, and thrusting their
probabilities deep into—”
“Their what?” queried Johnson, with a
frown.
“Probabilities—isn’t that the
word? Their trunks,” said Adam.
“Probosces, I imagine you mean,” suggested
Johnson.
“Yes—that was it.
Their probosces,” said Adam. “They
were great honey-gatherers, those elephants—far
better than the bees, because they could make so much
more of it in a given time.”
Munchausen shook his head sadly.
“I’m afraid I’m outclassed by these
antediluvians,” he said.
“Gentlemen! gentlemen!”
cried Sir Walter. “These interruptions
are inexcusable!”
“That’s what I think,”
said the stranger, with some asperity. “I’m
having about as hard a time getting this story out
as I would if it were a serial. Of course, if
you gentlemen do not wish to hear it, I can stop;
but it must be understood that when I do stop I stop
finally, once and for all, because the tale has not
a sufficiency of dramatic climaxes to warrant its
prolongation over the usual magazine period of twelve
months.”
“Go on! go on!” cried some.
“Shut up!” cried others—addressing
the interrupting members, of course.
“As I was saying,” resumed
the stranger, “I felt confident that within
an hour, in some way or other, that case would be placed
in my hands. It would be mine either positively
or negatively—that is to say, either the
person robbed would employ me to ferret out the mystery
and recover the diamonds, or the robber himself, actuated
by motives of self-preservation, would endeavor to
direct my energies into other channels until he should
have the time to dispose of his ill-gotten booty.
A mental discussion of the probabilities inclined
me to believe that the latter would be the case.
I reasoned in this fashion: The person robbed
is of exalted rank. She cannot move rapidly
because she is so. Great bodies move slowly.
It is probable that it will be a week before, according
to the etiquette by which she is hedged about, she
can communicate with me. In the first place,
she must inform one of her attendants that she has
been robbed. He must communicate the news to
the functionary in charge of her residence, who will
communicate with the Home Secretary, and from him
will issue the orders to the police, who, baffled at
every step, will finally address themselves to me.
’I’ll give that side two weeks,’
I said. On the other hand, the robber:
will he allow himself to be lulled into a false sense
of security by counting on this delay, or will he
not, noting my habit of occasionally entering upon
detective enterprises of this nature of my own volition,
come to me at once and set me to work ferreting out
some crime that has never been committed? My
feeling was that this would happen, and I pulled out
my watch to see if it were not nearly time for him
to arrive. The robbery had taken place at a state
ball at the Buckingham Palace. ‘H’m!’
I mused. ’He has had an hour and forty
minutes to get here. It is now twelve-twenty.
He should be here by twelve-forty-five. I will
wait.’ And hastily swallowing a cocaine
tablet to nerve myself up for the meeting, I sat down
and began to read my Schopenhauer. Hardly had
I perused a page when there came a tap upon my door.
I rose with a smile, for I thought I knew what was
to happen, opened the door, and there stood, much
to my surprise, the husband of the lady whose tiara
was missing. It was the Duke of Brokedale himself.
It is true he was disguised. His beard was powdered
until it looked like snow, and he wore a wig and a
pair of green goggles; but I recognized him at once
by his lack of manners, which is an unmistakable sign
of nobility. As I opened the door, he began:
“‘You are Mr.—’
“‘I am,’ I replied.
’Come in. You have come to see me about
your stolen watch. It is a gold hunting-case
watch with a Swiss movement; loses five minutes a
day; stem-winder; and the back cover, which does not
bear any inscription, has upon it the indentations
made by the molars of your son Willie when that interesting
youth was cutting his teeth upon it.’”
“Wonderful!” cried Johnson.
“May I ask how you knew all
that?” asked Solomon, deeply impressed.
“Such penetration strikes me as marvellous.”
“I didn’t know it,”
replied the stranger, with a smile. “What
I said was intended to be jocular, and to put Brokedale
at his ease. The Americans present, with their
usual astuteness, would term it bluff. It was.
I merely rattled on. I simply did not wish to
offend the gentleman by letting him know that I had
penetrated his disguise. Imagine my surprise,
however, when his eye brightened as I spoke, and he
entered my room with such alacrity that half the powder
which he thought disguised his beard was shaken off
on to the floor. Sitting down in the chair I
had just vacated, he quietly remarked:
“’You are a wonderful
man, sir. How did you know that I had lost my
watch?’
“For a moment I was nonplussed;
more than that, I was completely staggered.
I had expected him to say at once that he had not lost
his watch, but had come to see me about the tiara;
and to have him take my words seriously was entirely
unexpected and overwhelmingly surprising. However,
in view of his rank, I deemed it well to fall in with
his humour. ‘Oh, as for that,’ I
replied, ’that is a part of my business.
It is the detective’s place to know everything;
and generally, if he reveals the machinery by means
of which he reaches his conclusions, he is a fool,
since his method is his secret, and his secret his
stock-in-trade. I do not mind telling you, however,
that I knew your watch was stolen by your anxious glance
at my clock, which showed that you wished to know
the time. Now most rich Americans have watches
for that purpose, and have no hesitation about showing
them. If you’d had a watch, you’d
have looked at it, not at my clock.’
“My visitor laughed, and repeated
what he had said about my being a wonderful man.
“‘And the dents which
my son made cutting his teeth?’ he added.
“’Invariably go with an
American’s watch. Rubber or ivory rings
aren’t good enough for American babies to chew
on,’ said I. ’They must have gold
watches or nothing.’
“‘And finally, how did
you know I was a rich American?’ he asked.
“’Because no other can
afford to stop at hotels like the Savoy in the height
of the season,’ I replied, thinking that the
jest would end there, and that he would now reveal
his identity and speak of the tiara. To my surprise,
however, he did nothing of the sort.
“‘You have an almost supernatural
gift,’ he said. ’My name is Bunker.
I am stopping at the Savoy. I am an American.
I was rich when I arrived here, but I’m
not quite so bloated with wealth as I was, now that
I have paid my first week’s bill. I have
lost my watch; such a watch, too, as you describe,
even to the dents. Your only mistake was that
the dents were made by my son John, and not Willie;
but even there I cannot but wonder at you, for John
and Willie are twins, and so much alike that it sometimes
baffles even their mother to tell them apart.
The watch has no very great value intrinsically,
but the associations are such that I want it back,
and I will pay 200 pounds for its recovery.
I have no clew as to who took it. It was numbered—’
“Here a happy thought struck
me. In all my description of the watch I had
merely described my own, a very cheap affair which
I had won at a raffle. My visitor was deceiving
me, though for what purpose I did not on the instant
divine. No one would like to suspect him of
having purloined his wife’s tiara. Why
should I not deceive him, and at the same time get
rid of my poor chronometer for a sum that exceeded
its value a hundredfold?”
“Good business!” cried Shylock.
The stranger smiled and bowed.
“Excellent,” he said.
“I took the words right out of his mouth.
’It was numbered 86507B!’ I cried, giving,
of course, the number of my own watch.
“He gazed at me narrowly for
a moment, and then he smiled. ’You grow
more marvellous at every step. That was indeed
the number. Are you a demon?’
“‘No,’ I replied. ‘Only
something of a mind-reader.’
“Well, to be brief, the bargain
was struck. I was to look for a watch that I
knew he hadn’t lost, and was to receive 200 pounds
if I found it. It seemed to him to be a very
good bargain, as, indeed, it was, from his point of
view, feeling, as he did, that there never having
been any such watch, it could not be recovered, and
little suspecting that two could play at his little
game of deception, and that under any circumstances
I could foist a ten-shilling watch upon him for two
hundred pounds. This business concluded, he started
to go.
“‘Won’t you have
a little Scotch?’ I asked, as he started, feeling,
with all that prospective profit in view, I could well
afford the expense. ‘It is a stormy night.’
“‘Thanks, I will,’
said he, returning and seating himself by my table—still,
to my surprise, keeping his hat on.
“‘Let me take your hat,’
I said, little thinking that my courtesy would reveal
the true state of affairs. The mere mention of
the word hat brought about a terrible change in my
visitor; his knees trembled, his face grew ghastly,
and he clutched the brim of his beaver until it cracked.
He then nervously removed it, and I noticed a dull
red mark running about his forehead, just as there
would be on the forehead of a man whose hat fitted
too tightly; and that mark, gentlemen, had the undulating
outline of nothing more nor less than a tiara, and
on the apex of the uttermost extremity was a deep
indentation about the size of a shilling, that could
have been made only by some adamantine substance!
The mystery was solved! The robber of the Duchess
of Brokedale stood before me.”
A suppressed murmur of excitement
went through the assembled spirits, and even Messrs.
Hawkshaw and Le Coq were silent in the presence of
such genius.
“My plan of action was immediately
formulated. The man was completely at my mercy.
He had stolen the tiara, and had it concealed in
the lining of his hat. I rose and locked the
door. My visitor sank with a groan into my chair.
“‘Why did you do that?’
he stammered, as I turned the key in the lock.
“‘To keep my Scotch whiskey
from evaporating,’ I said, dryly. ’Now,
my lord,’ I added, ’it will pay your Grace
to let me have your hat. I know who you are.
You are the Duke of Brokedale. The Duchess of
Brokedale has lost a valuable tiara of diamonds, and
you have not lost your watch. Somebody has stolen
the diamonds, and it may be that somewhere there is
a Bunker who has lost such a watch as I have described.
The queer part of it all is,’ I continued, handing
him the decanter, and taking a couple of loaded six-shooters
out of my escritoire—’the queer part
of it all is that I have the watch and you have the
tiara. We’ll swap the swag. Hand
over the bauble, please.’
“‘But—’ he began.
“‘We won’t have
any butting, your Grace,’ said I. ’I’ll
give you the watch, and you needn’t mind the
200 pounds; and you must give me the tiara, or I’ll
accompany you forthwith to the police, and have a
search made of your hat. It won’t pay you
to defy me. Give it up.’
“He gave up the hat at once,
and, as I suspected, there lay the tiara, snugly stowed
away behind the head-band.
“‘You are a great fellow,’
said I, as I held the tiara up to the light and watched
with pleasure the flashing brilliance of its gems.
“‘I beg you’ll not
expose me,’ he moaned. ’I was driven
to it by necessity.’
“‘Not I,’ I replied.
’As long as you play fair it will be all right.
I’m not going to keep this thing. I’m
not married, and so have no use for such a trifle;
but what I do intend is simply to wait until your
wife retains me to find it, and then I’ll find
it and get the reward. If you keep perfectly
still, I’ll have it found in such a fashion
that you’ll never be suspected. If, on
the other hand, you say a word about to-night’s
events, I’ll hand you over to the police.’
“‘Humph!’ he said.
‘You couldn’t prove a case against me.’
“‘I can prove any case
against anybody,’ I retorted. ’If
you don’t believe it, read my book,’ I
added, and I handed him a copy of my memoirs.
“‘I’ve read it,’
he answered, ’and I ought to have known better
than to come here. I thought you were only a
literary success.’ And with a deep-drawn
sigh he took the watch and went out. Ten days
later I was retained by the Duchess, and after a pretended
search of ten days more I found the tiara, restored
it to the noble lady, and received the 5000 pounds
reward. The Duke kept perfectly quiet about our
little encounter, and afterwards we became stanch friends;
for he was a good fellow, and was driven to his desperate
deed only by the demands of his creditors, and the
following Christmas he sent me the watch I had given
him, with the best wishes of the season.
“So, you see, gentlemen, in
a moment, by quick wit and a mental concentration
of no mean order, combined with strict observance of
the pettiest details, I ferreted out what bade fair
to become a great diamond mystery; and when I say
that this cigar end proves certain things to my mind,
it does not become you to doubt the value of my conclusions.”
“Hear! hear!” cried Raleigh,
growing tumultuous with enthusiasm.
“Your name? your name?”
came from all parts of the wharf.
The stranger, putting his hand into
the folds of his coat, drew forth a bundle of business
cards, which he tossed, as the prestidigitator tosses
playing-cards, out among the audience, and on each
of them was found printed the words:
Sherlock Holmes,
detective.
FERRETING done here.
Plots for Sale.
“I think he made a mistake in
not taking the 200 pounds for the watch. Such
carelessness destroys my confidence in him,”
said Shylock, who was the first to recover from the
surprise of the revelation.